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GBIDIBON WIDE 

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SPECIAL 
PANAMA EDITION 



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WASHINGTON 



AS IT REALLY IS 



A Guide for Gridiron Guests 



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THE CAPITOL TO-DAY 



LAVISHLY ILLUSTRATED 



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JHIS Indispensable Volume was Originally Pre- 
pared with a View to Enabling the Visitor to 
Washington to Saunter Safely through the 
Mazes of a Mystifying Metropolis. The Aim of the 
Compilers has been Picturesque Conciseness without 
Sacrificing Consistency of Plot. It Has Been their Wish 
to Preserve the Traditions of a Capital Noted for the 
Variety of its Monuments, the Antiquity of its Office 
Holders and the Strenuous Adherence of its Ruling 
Classes to Spectacular Civil Service Reform. 

The Illustrations have been Supplied by Eminent 
Artists, who have Felt that Visitors would Value an 
Intelligent Interpretation of the True Significance of the 
Objects and Scenes Depicted Rather than a Slavish 
Subservience to Photographic Accuracy. 

The Special Panama Edition is Designed to Meet the 
demand from American Officials Temporarily Resident 
on The Isthmus Pending their Removal and Return. 

We Unreservedly Recommend a Perusal of Our Ad- 
vertising pages. No Advertisement has been Admitted 
which cannot Conscientiously be Classified Either as 
Wholesome or as Profitable. No Patent Medicines Can 
secure our Endorsement which have not Paid Liberally 
for it and no Intoxicating Liquors which we have not 
Thoroughly Tested. 









The Capitol 

Let us start at the Capitol. 

This Building, the Mecca of Rural Statesmen, 
is Mainly Noted for its Lobbies, which are of Generous Propor- 
tions. When Originally Constructed, it was Expected to Occupy 
a Prominent Place in Public Affairs. Of late years, it has been 
Dwarfed by Comparison with the White House. Somewhere 
within the Classic Outlines of the Majestic Marble Building is a 
Deliberate Body, which Imagines it is Entrusted with the Awful 
Duty of Making Laws to Govern the People of the United States. 
You will Find it at the Butt End of Uncle Joe Cannon's Cigar. 



DJD GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON fflD 



1&uUb nf lEttqurti? 



M 

m 



S WASHINGTON Yearly Becomes More and More Like 
a European Court, Rules of Etiquette are Rigidly- 
Observed. 

The Recognized Order of Precedence is: 

The President of The United States, 
The Vice President Of The United States, 

( When Ambassadors do not Object) 

Ambassadors, 

( When the Supreme Court does not Object) 

The Cabinet, 

( When Senators do not Object) 

Chief Justice of the Supreme court, 

( When he is Willing) 

The Speaker Of The House, 

( When Associate Jtistices of the Supreme Court do 
not Object) 

Associate Justices of the Supreme Court, 

( When Senators do not Object) 

Bailiffs Of The Local Courts, 

Senators, 

Representatives, 

( Who never Object) 

Army And Navy Officers, 

(Marine Corps not Recognized) 

The Public, 

( Which is Helpless) 



T 



GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 

— 7— 



Vice President's Room.— The 
Ceiling of this Room is Remarkable for 
its Great Height. It is Contiguous to the 
President's Room. This is Regarded 
in Some Quarters as an Architectural 
Blunder. 



The Senate Chamber is The 
Assembly Room of the Finest Club on 
Earth. The Deliberations of the Senate 
are Public, Except when the Doors are 
Closed for Executive Session. Then 
they are Published. 

There is no more Instructive Sight in 
Washington than when Senator Morgan 
is making a speech on the San Domingo 
Treaty. You can't see Morgan because 
the Doors are Shut and Locked. You 
can't see the other Senators because 
they are not There. 




Senate Chamber. 



Every Visitor to Washington, including 
Insurgent Representatives, should see 
the Speaker's Room. The Speaker 
is the Original E Pluribus Unum. He is 
386 Representatives in One. His Room 
is Adorned with a Clock and a Secretary. 



Pennsylvania Avenue was In- 
tended Originally to Separate Congress 
from the Executive. Modern Improve- 
ments including the Telephone, and 
Senators Lodge and Knox, have Nulli- 
fied this Intention. 



BJD GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 11 

The President ranks as King. The Vice President, however, 
is not Heir Apparent. Invitations from the President are 
Commands. His Criticisms of all Matters, Public and Private, 
must be Respected. Newspaper Correspondents Study his Wishes 
and are Guided by them. 

The Lower Classes make the first Call upon Those Above them. 
This Rule is Rigidly Enforced. The Secretary of the Treasury 
for Example is Expected to Call upon Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan. 

Full Dress is Required at Dinners. Steel-pen Coats and Decol- 
lete Gowns May be Hired at Low Rates. See our Advertising 
Pages. 

Congressmen with families will Refrain from Taking Cake and 
Fruit Home to the Children. 

Wines should be Judiciously Used. At the Better Class Tables 
Each Guest is Allowed no More than a Magnum of Champagne. 
It is Bad Form to Request the Waiter to Leave the Bottle at your 
Plate. 

Spoons for Soup, Forks for Fish, and Knives for Cutting Only 
are now de rigeur. 

Picking One's Teeth with a Fork at the Table Without Shielding 
the Mouth with the Hand or the Napkin Should be Avoided if 
Possible. 

Visitors Accustomed to Tying Napkins about their Necks 
while at Dinner Should Use the Modern Detachable Elastic 
Invented for that Purpose. See our Advertising Columns. 

Napkins or Spoons are not to be Taken from the Table. They 
may have been Hired for the Occasion. 

Hunting is Prohibited in the Zoological Gardens (Our Bears 
must be Protected) . 

Loaded Revolvers Strapped to the Hip are Permitted only to 
Private Secretaries. 

Members of the Cabinet are on View every Tuesday and Friday. 
They must not be Spoken to Without Written Permission. 



T 



GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 
— 9— 




The White House 



The White House— This is a School 
for the Education of Senators and Re- 
presentatives as to their Duty to their 
Country. The Head-Master is Prof. T. 
Roosevelt, A.B., A.M., LL.D., Litt. D. 
(Harvard, 1880) . There is a Gymnasium 
Connected with the Institution. The 
Motto is— 

<4 1bit fftrst anD jfrequent." 



Immediately Adjoining the White House 
is The Department of State, 
the workshop of a Man who would rather 
Serve his Country at $8,000, or $50,000 
per, than the Corporations for $250,000. 




Department of State. 




The Treasury. 



The Treasury is a Kindergarten for 
Bank Presidents, but not for Presidents of 
the United States. Many a Secretary of 
the Treasury has Tried it, but None ever 
Got There ! 



Cosmos Club. — Formerly the Resi- 
dence of Mrs. Madison. It Has an 
Insomnia Cure Annex. Many Notable 
Scientific Men Sleep in this House. 
Opposite the Cosmos Club is the office of 
Henry Gassaway Davis, who is Unique 
in Washington for Never Having been 
in Politics. 




*5 

Cosmos Club. 



11 GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON M 

THE SENATE VAUDEVILLE 

GAYEST OF GAIETIES 

Matinees Every Afternoon but Friday and Saturday 

WILLIAM B. ALLISON 

THE MARVELOUS HUMAN MEGAPHONE 

CHAS. W. FAIRBANKS 

IN HIS GREAT THINKING PART 

NELSON W. ALDRICH 

Champion Long' Distance Telepathist and Hypnotist, Read* 
Thoug'hts and Controls Action while Miles Away 

HENRY CABOT LODGE 

Lightning Transformation Artist in His Life-LiKe Impersona- 
tions of T. Roosevelt. 

BENJAHIN R. TILLMAN 

In His Refined Specialties 

HEYBURN and KITTREDGE 

Tripping' and Tantalizing' TerpsicHoreans 

JOSEPH BENSON FORAKER 

Equilibrist on the SlacK "Wire 

STEPHEN B. ELKINS 

Ventriloquist and Prestidig'itateur, in his Mystifying Railroad 
Rebate Vanishing' Act 

JOSEPH W. BAILEY 

MONOLOGIST 

JOHN C. SPOONER 

and ROBERT H. LAFOLLETTE 

The Wisconsin "Wonders. Featherweig'ht Sparrers 

ARTHUR P. GORHAN 

With his Own Company, Select and Limited, Engag'ed for this 

Occasion at Extraordinary Expense, in the 

One Act play entitled 

"LOST OPPORTUNITIES" 

And Other Attractions Which flust be Seen to be Appreciated 



GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 
—11- 



Strangers Visiting The War Depart- 
ment, can See how Secretary Taft 
Holds Down his Job. He Sits on It. 

This is also the Office of Major General 
F. C. Ainsworth. He was Promoted to 
his Present Rank for Coolness and 
Gallantry in the Face of Congressional 
Committees. 




War Department. 



ODD 
ODD 

ODD 



Near by is the Stable where Secretary 
Taft keeps his Saddle-Horse. Sympa- 
thetic Visitors can Leave Flowers on the 
Weighing Machine. 



Secretary Taft's Stable. 



This is the Residence of Henry 
Cabot Lodge, the great Reciprocity 
Agitator. Here is where he Cordially 
Reciprocates the Feelings Entertained 
toward Him by Henry M. Whitney and 
Others. 




Residence of 

Senator Lodge. 




Army and Navy Club. 



The Army and Navy Clvib is the 
Loafing Place of the Nation's Heroes. 
Their Conversation would Contribute 
Greatly to the Information of the Sec- 
retary of War, the Secretary of the Navy 
and the Naval and Military Committees 
of Congress. 



II GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON ID 

LEARN TO BE A STATESMAN BY MAIL 

THE INTERPLANETARY 
CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOL 

CONSULTING BOARD 

E. W. Carmack John Wesley Gaines 

William Sulzer Timothy D. Sullivan 

Charles S. Wharton William J. Stone 

George P. Wetmore Benjamin R. Tillman 



Why neglect this opportunity? It comes but once in 

a lifetime. 

Statesmanship is the Easiest Profession to Learn. 

The Interplanetary Correspondence School is the only 

Correspondence School which makes it 

a Specialty. 

YOU CAN DOUBLE YOUR SALARY 

NO WORK! NO WORRY!! 

Write at Once for Full Particulars. 



T 



GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 
—13- 



f 




Statuary Hall. 

Statuary Hall Contains the Finest Collection of Has-beens on 
Earth. The Room is Remarkable for its Acoustics, which Excite 
more Interest than the Solemn Effigies. Such is Fame. 



I 



GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 
—14— 



STOP! LOOK! LISTEN! 

HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR 

UNUSED RAILROAD PASSES 



ADDRESS: 

GEORGE H. DANIELS 

PRESIDENT 

United Association of Retired Passenger Agents. 

ARE YOU INSURED? 

If not, you will Never have a Better Chance 
than this. 

Special Inducements to Members of the 
House of Representatives, who contem- 
plate going up Against the Committee on 
Rules. 

Any Republican Congressman found serious- 
ly Crippled in or near the Speaker's Room 
with a copy of the Gridiron Guide in his 
pocket will Receive a Suitable Annuity by 
Presenting this Coupon at the Office of 
the Sergeant at Arms. 




MAP OF ^ 

BASED ON" THTC ZjA.TB 




SHINGTON 

GEO] .OCitCAI. SURVEY 



T 



GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 
—15— 



f 




Not far Away is the Metropolitan 
Clxxb. The Commissioner of Internal 
Revenue Reports the withdrawal of 
105,000,000 Gallons of Whiskey, for Rec- 
tification during the Last Fiscal Year, 
and 1,500,000 Gallons for Bottling in 
Bond. 



fletropolitan Club. 



ShoomaKer's. A famous resort 
owned by Frank A. Munsey, who has 
Declared In his Ov^n Handwriting that 
it is Really the Best he has Ever Seen. 
Nothing Prepared here is Used in Mr. 
Munsey's Magazine. 




Shoomakei's 




Hancock's 



Hancock's, at the Sign of 1-2-3-4 
Contains a Notable Museum, Single 
admission 15 cents; Two for a Quarter ; 
Light Refreshments Served (free), 
Three-quarters of a Mile from the 
Capitol, but Committees of Congress 
Frequently Hold Meetings Here. In 
Rear Rooms (after 5 P. M.) May Be 
seen Life-size figures of Senators and 
Representatives. 



1) GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON M 

THE BOOK OF THE YEAR 



"The Young Man in a Whirl." 

By CHARLES W. FAIRBANKS. 

"Every Boy Cannot be President and What is More every boy 
ought not to be." p. 7. 



THE CREMO OF LITERATURE! 

For Sale at all Stations on the Trans-Siberian 
Railway. 

Published Originally in the Gentleman's Home Journal 

DELICIOUS! APPETIZING ! ! SATISFYING!!! 



ALSO 



"Presidential Problems" 

By LESLIE M. SHAW, 

Author of "Humor in High Finance." 



GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 
—17- 



T 



Those who are Interested in Engineering 
Problems should not Fail to Visit the 
Mills Building'. In the Rear Part 
of this Structure on the Sixth Floor 
Shonts is Digging a Canal and Bishop is 
Writing One. The Problem is to see 
How Long They can Keep at it. On 
Leaving the Mills Building visitors may 
Profitably Call at the Smithsonian 
Institution where Prof. Langley is 
Financing a Flying Machine. 




n n n n'fi 



QQBO 



Mills Building. 




SovitKern Railway Office. Mr. 

Samuel Spencer Does his Literary Work 
here. The Best View of this Place may 
be Obtained from the Interstate Com- 
merce Commission, or from the Spanish 
Treaty Claims Commission. 



Southern Railway. 



Not too far Away is the Residence of 
William E,. CHandler. Watch 
out! He Throws Bricks. 




fir. Chandler's House. 



f 



GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 
—18— 



Uictim$of Sedentary fiabit$ 



MAY FIND RELIEF 



A Permanent Cure Guaranteed 



Read the Following Testimonial 



Hon. John T. Morgan, 
Dear Sir: — 

I have been addicted for over 30 
years to the unfortunate Sitting Habit. Fearing that 
it might become Chronic I had tried Cummins' s Cap- 
sules, Shaw's Specific and other recognized remedies 
without Appreciable Relief Finally it was suggested 
to me to try one of your speeches. In Despair I did so. 
At the first test I found it impossible to Remain in My 
Seat and Have Had no Desire to Occupy it Since 
While You had the Floor. 

Yours Gratefully, 

WILLIAM B. ALLISON. 



T 



GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 
—19- 




The Navy Department is a Massive 
Granite Building with a French Roof 
and a French Secretary. It is the Head- 
quarters of the National Civil Service 
Reform Association, pro tern. Friends 
of Good Government are Respectfully 
Invited to Step in and see an Office 
run by a Man who for Many Years has 
been Telling People how one Ought to 
be Run. 



Navy Department. 



Post Office Department. Passing 
Rapidly through Postmaster General 
Cortelyou's Ante Room we come to the 
Headquarters of the Republican National 
Committee. It has direct private Tele- 
phone Communication with the White 
House. 




Post Office Department. 




Department of Justice. 



In Ancient Times the Department 
of Justice was Run by a Single Lady, 
who kept Her Eyes Shut. Under this 
Administration the Manager is a Single 
Gentleman who keeps his Eyes Open. 
Look in and See William Henry Moody 
Bust a Trust. 



OJD GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON M 




HALLS OF THE ANCIENTS 

Driven from our Former Home 

We Have Secured a Permanent Lease 

Of the North Wing of the Capitol 
"Where Visitors Will Find on Exhibition Daily 

"Relics of a *By-Gone Age 

EXPOSITION OF THE TRADITIONS 

OF THE 
SENATE BY EMINENT ESSAYISTS 

PERSONAL REMINISCENCES OF THE EARLY DAYS 
OF THE REPUBLIC 



ADMISSION FREE 



T 



GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 
—21— 



The Washington Post is the Only 
Newspaper in the World that Runs Its 
Own Gas Works. 





Washington Post. 

British Embassy. — This is the Den 
of the British Lion. We don't Twist his 
Tail any More. Tail-twisting went out 
of Style about the Time of the Spanish 
War. 



British Embassy. 



The Pension Office is Sup- 
posed to be the Ugliest Building 
in Washington. The Outside Frieze 
Represents the Unending Proces- 
sion of Decapitated Commission- 
ers Passing into Private Life. 
The Inside Freeze is for Old 
Soldiers and Inaugural Balls. 




Pension office. 




The Agricultural Department.— 

James Wilson is Secretary of Agriculture. 
His Friends call him "Old Cornjuice." 
He has Extraordinary Staying Powers. 
That's All. 



Agricultural Department. 



II GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON M) 



White House Tennis Courts. 

Admission Restricted to Members of the 
Keep Commission and the French Ambas- 
sador; French being the Language of the 
Courts. 



The Bounding B* & O- 

BOASTS THE MOST 
PICTURESQUE ROAD BED IN AMERICA 

Rolling Stock 

Tested By Years of Hard Service 



ALL TRAINS WAIT ANYWHERE FOR PASS- 
ENGERS ON SIGNAL. 



I 



GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 
—23— 



Visit the Residence of ArtH\ir P\ie 

Gorman, who for many years, Repre- 
sented the State of Maryland in the 
Senate. He Represents the State in 
Part now. 



This is the Mexican Embassy. The 
new Ambassador is a Big Man in his 
own Country, and He is Growing very 
Rapidly in this. Here's to our Next 
Door Neighbor. 




Mexican Embassy. 




The liaiserHaus Stands on a Hill so 
that the German Ambassador can See 
what is Going on. He doesn't Miss a 
Trick. 



Around the Corner is St. John's 
Episcopal CK\ircK, where Fashion- 
able People get Married. When Metho- 
dists, Baptists, or Presbyterians come to 
Washington, they Always Rent Pews in 
St. John's Church. It Helps Climbers 
Along. 



St. John's Church. 



On the Right Hand Corner as you pass 
up K Street is the Residence of tHe 
Vice President. "Another Place 
to Eat". 



1) GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON ffl) 

WANTED.-To Correspond with House Insurgents— Object 
Matrimony. Apply to Carlos Morales, Santo Domingo. 

WANTED.— Information as to the Whereabouts of William R. 
Hearst. He has not been seen in Washington since the begin- 
ning of Congress. Address Sergeant at Arms, House of Repre- 
sentatives. 

WANTED.— An Experienced Censor to Revise the Copy of 
Reporters Stationed at the Executive Mansion. Must bring 
Recommendations from Nicholas Alaxanderovitch II, or Nicho- 
las Longworth. Apply at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. 



ARE YOU OUT OF EMPLOYMENT? 

WANTED Able Bodied Men 

to ride on the Pennsylvania Railroad. 

MONEY NO OBJECT 
We Must Fill Our Cars! 



Apply, Giving Age and Number of Dependent Family, to 
GEO. W. BOYD, General Passenger Agent, 
Pennsylvania Railroad. 



f 



GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 
—25— 



This is a Statue of the Hon. Francis 
G. Newlands, which Has not Yet 
been Erected. 



Statute of Senator Newlands. 



At a Respectable Distance is the Pres- 
byterian ClvurcH of tKe Cove- 
nant where Statesmen go to Confess 
their Sins and Get a Fresh Hold. 





Church of the Covenant. 



Belasco TKeater. — This is a No- 
Trust Theater. You Have to Pay in 
Advance. 



Belasco Theater 

Rivaling in Height the Proposed Life 
Size Statue of Charles W. Fairbanks the 
Washington Monument Towers 
above the Town. It can be Ascended in 
Eight Minutes With the Aid of the Elec- 
tric Elevator and descended in Eight 
Seconds Without. It was Thirty-seven 
years in Building, Having been Started 
during the Administration of a Slow 
President who Could not Command the 
Services of a Commission. Let Us 
Pause here and Ponder. 




Washington Monument. 



II GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON M 



£Wtt Wr&wcb ?Jf *tri 



BEST MODERATE PRICE HOUSE IN AMERICA 



Try Our Seventy-five Cent 
Table d'Hote 



SEE ON OPPOSITE PAGE SAMPLE 

PREPARED FOR 

THE WORLD RENOWNED 

GRIDIRON CLUB. 



DjD GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON M 

MENU 




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(tansammt {IrtnrFaa £mtn 



(Mt»w SabiBhra £altfi> Nttta <fl*lmj 



iFrien &mrlta, aanr? tartare 
Potatnpa ffariaunne (Surumbpra 



£n»rone nf QJannn, trnffU aaur? {foruntrox 



©maptn a la iHarglano 



(Brffitrmt Prntrlt 



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&alafc in ^raanti 



Jr?a in fanrtj forms 
^ptitr IFnwra 



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MOET S CHAN DON, 

BRUT IMPERIAL AND 
WHITE SEAL 1900 

APOLLIN AR IS WATER. 



GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 
—28— 



T 



f 



Cbe Gridiron Club 

of Washington, D. C. 
Committees tor 1906: 



Vice-President Blythe and Secretary Shriver 
ex-officio members of all committees. 



£ntcrtainment 



Invitation 



Oarthe, Chairman 

Blythe 

Henry 

Coolidgk 

West 

O'Brien 

Snyder 

Hall 

Johnson, S. E. 

Patterson 

Stealey 

Kauffmann 

Johnson, P. C. 

Walker, G. H. 

Bennett 

Odlahan 

Corwin 

Wynne 



Schroder 

Chairman 
Miller, T. P. 

I«BUPP 

Bone 

IvlNDSAY 

Ohl 
Shrivkr 

HOSFORD 
ROUZER 

Brown 
Dunn 
DeGraw 
Bdsbey 
Walker, R. G. 



flSenn 

Coolidge, Chairman 

West 

Curtis 

Carpenter 

Seckrndorff 

Oulahan 

Cunningham 



tReception 

McKee, Chairman 
Noyes 

BOYNTON 

Carson 
Rouzer 
Richardson 

IyARNRR 

Clarke 
Handy- 
Dodge 



flDusic 

Randolph, Chairman 

stofer 

Messenger 

West 

Young 

Jermane 

Hay 

Xander 

Mors ell 

Nolan 

Kaiser 

Moshkr 

small 

Sousa 

Henry 

Johnson, P. C. 

Kauffmann 

Snyder 

Cunningham 



f 



GRIDIRON GUIDE TO WASHINGTON 
—29— 



f 



Cbe Gridiron £iub 

OF WASHINGTON, D. C. 

ORGANIZED JAN. 24, 1885 



OFFICERS FOR THE YEAR 1906 

President, RICHARD LEE FEARN 

Vice-President, SAMUEL GEORGE BLYTHE 
Secretary, JOHN SHULTZ SHRIVER 

Treasurer, GEO. H. WALKF.R 

Executive Committee 
(in addition to officers) 

Louis Garthe Scott Bone 

Charles A. Boynton 



Resident Members 

Blythe, Samuel G New York World 

Bone, Scott C Washington, D. C. 

Boynton, Charles A The Associated Press 

Brown, Henry S New York Herald 

Busbey, L- White 2516 zjth St. N. W. 

Carpenter, Frank G. . . . Carpenter's Syndicate 

Carson, John M 1332 Vermont Ave. N.W. 

Clarke, H. Conquest 1752 N St. N. W. 

Coolidgk, LA 1423 Welling Place 

Curtis, William E Chicago Record-Herald 

DeGraw, P. V 210 Maryland Ave. N.E. 

Dodge, Arthur J Milwaukee Sentinel 

Dunn, Arthur W The Associated Ptess 

Ffarn. Richard Lee New York Tribune 

Garthe, Loi'is Ballimote American 

Hall, Hknry Pittsburg Times 

Handy, F. A. G 1331 12th St. N.W. 

Henry, James S Philadelphia Press 

Hosford, Frank H Detroit Times 

Jp.rmane, W. W Minneapolis Journal 

Johnson, Philander C Washington Star 

Johnson, S. E • Cincinnati Enquirer 

Kauffmann, Rudolph Washington Star 

Larnkr, R. M. . . . Charleston News and Courier 

Lei-pp, Francis E 1813 16th St. N.W. 

Lindsay, Richard H Kansas City Star 

McKee, David R 1753 Rhode Island Ave. 

Messenger, N. O Washington Star 

Miller, John P Baltimore Sun 

Noyes, Crosby S Washington Star 

O'Brihn, Robert L Boston Transcript 

Ohl, J. K Atlanta Constitution 

Oulahan, Richard V Neiu York Sun 

Pattkrson, Raymond Chicago Tribune 

Randolph, Charles C Arizona Republican 

Richardson, F. A Baltimore Sun 

Rouzer, Geo. W The Rochambeau 



Schroeder, Reginald . . . . N. Y. Staats-Zeitung 

Seckendorff, M. G . 2018 Hillyer Place 

Shriver, John S Cincinnati Times-Star 

Snyder, Edgar C Omaha Bee 

Stealky, O.O Louisville Courier Journal 

Stofer, Alfred J Baltimore Herald 

Walker, Ernest G Boston Herald 

Walker, Geo. H 8 Lajavette Square 

West, Henry L District Building 

Wynne, Robert J. . U. S. Consulate, London, Eng. 
Young, James Rankin . . . Philadelphia Dispatch 

Non-Resident Members 

Adams, Walter E Boston Herald, Boston 

Barrett, E. W. . . Age-Herald, Birmingham, Ala. 
Barry, David S. . The Journal, Providence, R. I. 
Corwin, John Adams . 4157 Ellis Avenue Chicago 

DePdy, Frank A N. Y. Hetald, New York 

Gibson, E. J. . . • Beach and Varick Sts., New York 

Heath, Perry S Muncie, Indiana 

Knapp, C W St. Louis Republic, St. Louis 

Miller, albert Los Angeles, Cal. 

Presbrey, Frank . . . 3-7 W. 20th St., New York 
Stevens, W. B. ..... Exposition, St. Louis, Mo. 

Limited Members 

Bennett, Frank V The Gotham, New York 

Cunningham, J.Harry Star Building 

Hay, E. B 1400 N. Y. Ave. N.W. 

Kaiser, J. Henry 1740 F St. N.W. 

MORSELL, HERNDON 1410 15th St. N.W. 

Mosher, Alex 1730 20th St. N. W. 

Nolan, John H 1413 G St. N. W. 

Small, Jr., J. Henry. . . . 14th and G Sts. N.W. 
Sousa, John Philip . . . 18 W. 34th St., New York 
Xander, Henry .-. . — . . .— . 909 7th St. N.W. 






' <i 



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LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 



002 556 586 1 



LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 



000555L,Sfibl 




